Listen, we are calling you back/ Once driven out / now you should return. From the land / where milk and honey once flowed / you were driven out. You are being called back / to the country which has been destroyed. / And nothing more / have we to offer you, other than that you are needed. / Poor or rich / healthy or infirm / forget everything / and come.

Bertolt Brecht: To the actor P. L. in exile (1950)

Born

on 26 June 1904 in Rosenberg, Austria-Hungary, today: Austria

Died

on 23 March 1964 in Los Angeles, USA

Exile

United States of America

Remigration

Federal Republic of Germany

Profession

Actor, Screenwriter, Film director

Until 1931, when the film director Fritz Langgave him his signature role in M, except for two small supporting roles in silent films, Peter Lorre had only acted in the theatre. He had contracts in theatres in Wroclaw, Zurich, Vienna and Bertolt Brecht's theatre on the Schiffbauerdamm in Berlin. His portrayal of a child murderer made him a film star overnight. He left Germany in 1933 and thereby evaded physical persecution. The Nazis found other means to persecute him however. The propaganda films Juden ohne Maske (Jews Unmasked; 1937) and Der ewige Jude (The Eternal Jew, 1940) show excerpts from M as if Lorre is not playing a role, but is in reality a sexual pervert.

The actor went to Vienna, Paris and finally to London, where he appeared before the camera under the direction of Alfred Hitchcock. He travelled to the United States in 1934 and found employment in Hollywood quickly – he was famous there from M. As a result of this, he was frequently typecast in the same role. Lorre, who was 1.65 meters tall, played devious criminals or the mentally ill, or in any case, the villain. The Mr. Moto detective films, produced from 1937, were an exception to this. Lorre moved back to Germany in 1950. But after the film Der Verlorene (The Lost One; 1951), for which he worked as director and star, fell flat with audiences, he returned to the United States where he worked until his death in theatre, television and film productions.